Showing posts with label Jack Prelutsky. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Jack Prelutsky. Show all posts

Monday, April 15, 2013

Some Poems for Your Pocket!

Not only is April National Poetry Month, but this Thursday, April 18, is national Poem in Your Pocket Day. Participants of all ages are encouraged to keep a copy of their favorite poem in their pocket, and to take it out and read it to people they encounter throughout the day. Ideas for activities can be found by clicking on the link, but to get you started, allow me to suggest one of my favorite poets:
 
The New Kid on the Block      A Pizza the Size of the Sun
978-006-2239501            978-006-223-9518
 
Boh recently re-released by HarperCollinsChildrens, these collections contain much of the best of Jack Prelutsky, silly poet extraordinaire. Even the smallest pocket can fit a chestnut like:
 
Sardines
Their daily lives are bland,
and if they land -
they're canned.
 
Or, if you want something more fun to read aloud, see how the lines of The Underwater Wibbles trip off the tongue. When I trained young students to be English teachers in Ukraine many years ago, I made them memorize and recite Jack Prelutsky poems as part of their midterm exams. They had a choice - go with something safe and easy, and get a passing grade, or go for the extra credit points of the tongue-twister, Don't Ever Seize a Weasel by the Tail (not included in these collections, unfortunately).
 
Besides being wodnerful tools for teaching those tricky English sounds, Prelutsky's poems are great for tucking into lunch boxes, or refocusing students after recess. They are just plain fun and timeless! Pick up a copy of either of these for your elementary school student, and watch it quickly become dog-eared and worn.
 
Thank-you to HarperCollins for the review copies!

For more great nonfiction books, check out today's Nonfiction Monday round-up at NC Teacher Stuff (I want the Animal Geometry book!)



Wednesday, April 10, 2013

Review: Stardines Swim High Across the Sky and Other Poems, by Jack Prelutsky and Carin Berger

Stardines Swim High Across the Sky: and Other Poems
 
978-006-201-4641
 
Here is a concept sure to appeal to any imaginative youngster: Jack Prelutsky, "having returned safely from far-flung places", brings us a collection of strange new creatures. We have the Slobsters:
 
SLOBSTERS are slovenly,
SLOBSTERS are crude.
SLOBSTERS love mashing
And smushing their food.
 
Or, the Sobcat:
 
The SOBCAT is sad
As a feline can be
And spends its time crying
Continuously.
 
Those are just excerpts of each descriptive poem, byt he way. You simply have to grab a copy of this to read on your own, and then pore over the details of Berger's illustrations. They are all dioramas, shadow boxes, and cut-paper collages, made up of "catalogues, old books, receipts, letters, and ticket stubs". If Prelutsky's poetry doesn't inspire your child to create a new creature or two in words, Berger's artwork is sure to have them grabbing the glue and scissors.
 
This is another one of those books that (almost) makes me wish I was teaching again. An entire week's worth of lesson plans could spring from this one delightful volume. Science - find the real animals that were changed slightly, and find out what they are really like. Research animals that really are hybrids of two other animals, or look for ways animals have adapted. Reading - oh, the vocabulary! Aqueous! Copious! Lachrymose! Plight! Social studies - why would you want a JOLLYFISH around, but not a TATTLESNAKE? Math - just consider the pleasant little WEDGEHOGS.
 
Yes, this is a book that belongs in every elementary classroom, and while poetry books in general do not circulate well here, I predict this one will be safe from weeding for a long, long time. Thank-you to HarperCollins for the review copy!